414 results on '"publieke tuinen"'
Search Results
2. Groen: meer dan mooi en gezond : de meerwaarde van groen in de stedelijke omgeving
- Author
-
Hiemstra, J.A., Vries, S. de, Spijker, J.H., Ravesloot, M.B.M., Voeten, J.W.G.F., Hiemstra, J.A., Vries, S. de, Spijker, J.H., Ravesloot, M.B.M., and Voeten, J.W.G.F.
- Abstract
Groen heeft meer positieve effecten op onze leefomgeving dan op gezondheid en welbevinden alleen. Groen kan ook een goede rol vervullen voor de waterhuishouding en biodiversiteit in de bebouwde omgeving. En het kan helpen de effecten van geluidsoverlast te beperken. Voorts kan groen een positief effect hebben op de vastgoedwaarde van woningen en kantoren. Dit document biedt meer inzicht in de algemene voordelen van groen en is daarmee een aanvulling op de factsheets die specifiek ingaan op de meerwaarde van groen in relatie tot gezondheid en welbevinden bij Wonen, Werken, Leren en Zorg.
- Published
- 2022
3. Prairietuinen dragen bij aan biodiversiteit, ook op het dak : Daktuinen spelen belangrijke rol bij natuurinclusief bouwen
- Author
-
Arkesteijn, M. and Arkesteijn, M.
- Abstract
Volgens de plannen van de overheid moeten er in 2030 bijna een miljoen nieuwe woningen gebouwd zijn. Dit geeft een enorme druk op de groene ruimte. Steeds meer gemeenten stellen daarom aanvullende eisen op voor extra groen. Op het lijstje van vergroeningsopties neemt de aanleg van daktuinen een belangrijke plaats in. Een prairietuin op het dak draagt bij aan de biodiversiteit en biedt jaarrond een kleurrijk beeld, of het nu gaat om een particuliere tuin bij een appartementencomplex of om openbare tuinen.
- Published
- 2021
4. Floriade legt het accent op meerwaarde : Na uitgaven en inkomsten volgt de nalatenschap
- Author
-
Mullink, B. and Mullink, B.
- Abstract
Het benodigde bedrag voor de Floriade is opgelopen tot 60 miljoen euro. Dan mag ervan uitgaan worden dat de verwachtingen hooggespannen zijn. De organisatie heeft de eindsprint ingezet om alles voor de opening in april volgend jaar gereed te hebben. De wereldtuinbouwtentoonstelling moet uitdragen dat 'het leven in een groene stad het goede leven is'.
- Published
- 2021
5. Wild Garden: nieuwe 'wilde' borders voor Keukenhof 2021 : Keukenhof plant coronaproof
- Author
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Boxtel, C. van and Boxtel, C. van
- Abstract
In (de) Keukenhof zijn de voorbereidingen voor het seizoen 2021 in volle gang. Het park is dit jaar niet open geweest omdat de eerste lockdown juist in de bollentijd viel. Zeven miljoen bloeiende bollen waren voor het publiek uitsluitend via de televisie-uitzendingen van Omroep Max te bewonderen. Hoewel de sluiting een enorme tegenvaller was, ook (en juist) voor de gemotiveerde ploeg tuinlieden, zit Keukenhof allerminst bij de pakken neer.
- Published
- 2020
6. Oproep aan terreinbeheerders: plant geen exoten!
- Abstract
De laatste weken hebben we diverse berichten gelezen van terreinbeheerders die bij aanplant/herplant van bomen kiezen voor exoten, soms zelfs voor invasieve exoten. Wij roepen hen dringend op: doe dat niet!
- Published
- 2020
7. Van vergeten plek naar eetbare buurt : Alternatief omgaan met eigendom van grond in de praktijk: interview met medewerker Velt
- Author
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Bal, N., Gommers, G., Bal, N., and Gommers, G.
- Abstract
Velt vzw (Vereniging voor Ecologisch Leven en Tuinieren, vereniging zonder winstoogmerk) verenigt eenieder die milieuvriendelijk aan de slag wil in de tuin of keuken. In Vlaanderen en Nederland telt de vereniging ruim 18.000 leden en 130 lokale groepen. Zorg voor de (tuin) bodem is een belangrijk thema voor Velt en wie bodemzorg zegt, denkt automatisch ook aan eigendom van grond. Ik vroeg me af hoe de vereniging in de praktijk omgaat met grondeigendom en ging langs bij Geert Gommers.
- Published
- 2020
8. Energietuin Mastwijk – Ontwerpsessie #2 : Terugkoppeling
- Abstract
Op de voormalige vuilstort te Mastwijk werken Afvalzorg en NMU samen aan de ontwikkeling van een Energietuin. Daarin wordt duurzame energie gecombineerd met openbare natuur, recreatiemogelijkheden en educatie. En dat niet alleen: de Energietuin wordt ontworpen en uitgevoerd samen met de omgeving. Zo moet een beleefbaar landschap ontstaan dat meerwaarde levert voor het gebied. Na de eerste ontwerpsessie op 14 mei 2019 en de tussentijdse presentatieavond (op 26 juni) volgde op 10 december een tweede brede ontwerpsessie. Daarin presenteerden we aan omwonenden en lokale belanghebbenden een conceptontwerp voor de gehele Energietuin. In het tweede deel kregen de aanwezigen de gelegenheid hun reactie te geven op dit tussenresultaat. Wat vindt men er goed aan en wat kan juist nog anders of beter?
- Published
- 2019
9. Communal forest gardens in urban environments in the Netherlands : An analysis of the benefits and success factor : Working towards a handbook for active citizens
- Author
-
Verbeek, H. and Verbeek, H.
- Abstract
This thesis report has been commissioned by the Water Authority Limburg. The report provides an analysis of the different potential benefits of communal forest gardens implemented in urban environments in the Netherlands, as well as an evaluation on the requirements and conditions necessary to successfully create urban communal forest gardens. While answering this research question the thesis additionally aimed to work towards a handbook containing necessary step for active citizens who aspire to establish a forest garden in their own community. The report draws attention to multifarious existent urban environmental and social challenges. Communal forest gardens could play a key role in tackling pressing urban environmental and social challenges of these times. The attributes and characteristics of forest gardens can positively impact how the area copes with physical stresses like flooding, air pollution, heat stress, while mitigating or slowing down a loss of biodiversity. As well as more social related challenges like , growing disconnect citizens and of food production, social isolation, and public health.
- Published
- 2019
10. chemotuin
- Abstract
In de chemotuin van het ziekenhuis in Tergooi wordt chemotherapie in de buitenlucht gegeven om het welbevinden van patiënten te verbeteren. In het kader van de studie 'Groene gezonde ziekenhuizen' van de VU en de RUG wordt ook wetenschappelijk onderzoek uitgevoerd in de chemotuin. Deze studie is mede mogelijk gemaakt door de Topsector Tuinbouw.
- Published
- 2017
11. Gezonde steden, buurttuinen en nieuwe ongelijkheid
- Author
-
Spierings, B., Liempt, I. van, Maliepaard, E., Spierings, B., Liempt, I. van, and Maliepaard, E.
- Abstract
Het aantal buurttuinen in Nederland groeit de laatste jaren in een snel tempo, mede gestimuleerd door lokale overheden en onderbouwd met positieve effecten op onder andere de kwaliteit van voeding en de leefbaarheid van wijken. Dit artikel geeft een kritische reflectie op deze hype en nuanceert de hooggespannen verwachtingen rondom buurttuinen.
- Published
- 2016
12. Community gardens in urban areas: a critical reflection on the extent to which they strenghten social cohesion and provide alternative food
- Author
-
Veen, E.J., Wageningen University, Han Wiskerke, Andries Visser, and Bettina Bock
- Subjects
community action ,bewonersparticipatie ,OT Team Agriculture & Society ,alternatieve landbouw ,urban areas ,WASS ,tuinieren ,urban agriculture ,organic foods ,foods ,volkstuinen ,gardening ,publieke tuinen ,allotment gardens ,sociology ,public gardens ,sociologie ,voedingsmiddelen ,Rural Sociology ,stadslandbouw ,biologische voedingsmiddelen ,stedelijke gebieden ,buurtactie ,community participation ,Rurale Sociologie ,OT Team Landbouw & Samenleving ,alternative farming - Abstract
Summary Introduction The aims of this thesis are twofold; firstly, it aims to increase the understanding of the extent to which community gardens enhance social cohesion for those involved; secondly, it aims to gain insight into the importance community gardeners attach to food growing per se, and the extent to which participants perceive community gardens as an alternative to the industrial food system. I define community gardens as a plot of land in an urban area, cultivated either communally or individually by people from the direct neighbourhood or the wider city, or in which urbanites are involved in other ways than gardening, and to which there is a collective element. Over the last years, community gardens have sprung up in several Dutch cities. Although there are various reasons for an increasing interest in community gardens, there are two that I focus on in this thesis in particular. The first is the assumption made that community gardens stimulate social cohesion in inner-city neighbourhoods, to be seen in the light of the ‘participatory society’. The second is community gardens’ contribution to the availability of locally produced food, in the context of an increased interest in Alternative Food Networks (AFNs). The Dutch government aims to transform the Dutch welfare state into a participatory society in which citizens take more responsibility for their social and physical environment. This way the government not only hopes to limit public spending, but also wishes to increase social bonding and the self-organisational capacity of society. Community gardens fit the rhetoric around the participatory society, as they are examples of organised residents taking responsibility for their living environment. Moreover, the literature suggests that gardens are physical interventions that may decrease isolation by acting as meeting places. However, both the extent to which community gardens enhance social cohesion and under what conditions they may do so are unclear, especially as gardens come in various designs, shapes and sizes. The popularity of community gardens also seems to be related to an overall increasing societal interest in food, and can be discussed in relation to Alternative Food Networks. AFNs are food systems that are different in some way from the mainstream, and are seen as a reaction to consumer concerns about the conventional food system. They are often considered to be dictated by political motivations and injected with a ‘deeper morality’. The category ‘AFN’ is however a heterogeneous category, as is the conventional food system; neither can be easily defined. The degree to which community gardens can be seen as AFNs is therefore unclear. While they do improve the availability of local food and operate outside of the market economy, we do not know how much and how often people eat from their gardens, nor do we know to what extent they are involved in the gardens in order to provide an alternative to the industrial food system. Hence, there is a lack of knowledge about the sense in which community gardens are alternative alternatives. Research questions The overall research question of this thesis is: What is the significance of community gardening in terms of its intention to promote social cohesion as well as its representation as an alternative food system? This broad question is instructed by the following sub-questions: Why do people get involved in community gardens? What are their motivations?How, to what extent, and under which conditions does community gardening promote the development of social relations between participants? How do participants value these social effects? To what extent do the diets of community garden participants originate from the gardens in which they are involved? What is the importance of food in community gardens?What is the importance of growing or getting access to alternative food for participants of community gardens? Methodology An important theoretical lens in this research is the theory of practice. Practices are defined as concrete human activity and include things, bodily doings and sayings. By performing practices people not only draw upon but also feed into structure. Routinisation – of practices, but also of daily life – therefore plays a central role in practice theory. Practice theory allows for an emphasis on practical reality as well as a study of motivations. This focus on how people manage everyday life, and how gardening fits within that, makes it particularly useful for this thesis. I define social cohesion as the way in which people in a society feel and are connected to each other (De Kam and Needham 2003) and operationalised it by focusing on ‘social contacts, social networks, and social capital’, one of the elements into which social cohesion is often broken up. This element was operationalised as 1) contacts (the width of social cohesion) and 2) mutual help (the depth of social cohesion). This research has a case study design; I studied four Dutch community gardens over a two-year period of time, and later supplemented these with an additional three cases. As practices consist of both doings and sayings, analysis must be concerned with both practical activity and its representation. I used participant observations to study practical activities, and interviews, questionnaires and document study to examine the representation of these activities. Findings Chapters 3 to 7 form the main part of this thesis. They are papers/book chapters that have been submitted to or are published by scientific journals or books. All of them are based on the field work. In chapter 3 we compare two of the case studies and determine to what extent they can be seen as ‘alternative’. We argue that although reflexive motivations are present, most participants are unwilling to frame their involvement as political, and mundane motivations play an important role in people’s involvement as well. By using the concept of ‘food provisioning practices’ we show that participants of community gardens are often required to be actively involved in the production of their food. This means that participants are both producers and consumers: the gardens show a ‘sliding scale of producership’. This chapter also shows that political statements are not a perfect predictor of actual involvement in community gardening. This finding was one of the main reasons for starting to use the theory of practice, which is the main topic of the next chapter. In chapter 4 we compare one of my case studies with an urban food growing initiative in New York City. By comparing the internal dynamics of these two cases and their relations with other social practices, we investigate whether different urban food growing initiatives can be seen as variations of one single practice. We also study the question of whether the practice can be seen as emerging. In particular, we take the elements of meaning, competences and material (Shove et al. 2012) into account. We found both similarities and differences between the two cases, with the main difference relating to the meanings practitioners attach to the practice. We conclude, therefore, that it is not fully convincing to see these cases as examples of the same social practice. We also argue that urban food growing may be considered an emerging practice, because it combines various practices, both new and established, under one single heading. In chapter 5 we use the theory of practice to explore how urban food growing is interwoven with everyday life. We compare four community gardens - two allotments and two cases which we define as AFNs. We found that participants of the allotments are involved in the practice of gardening, while members of the AFNs are involved in the practice of shopping. The gardening practice requires structural engagement, turning it into a routine. The produce is a result of that routine and is easily integrated into daily meals. As AFNs are associated with the practice of shopping, they remain in competition with more convenient food acquisition venues. Eating from these gardens is therefore less easily integrated in daily life; every visit to the garden requires a conscious decision. Hence, whether members are primarily involved in shopping or in growing has an impact on the degree to which they eat urban-grown food. This shows that motivations are embedded in the context and routine of everyday life, and ‘only go so far’. Chapter 6 concerns the organisational differences between the seven case studies in this thesis and the extent to which these influence the enhancement of social cohesion. We study people’s motivations for being involved in the gardens and compare these with the three main organisational differences. This comparison reveals that the gardens can be divided into place-based and interest-based gardens. Place-based gardens are those in which people participate for social reasons – aiming to create social bonds in the neighbourhood. Interest-based gardens are those in which people participate because they enjoy growing vegetables. Nevertheless, all of these gardens contribute to the development of social cohesion. Moreover, while participants who are motivated by the social aspects of gardening show a higher level of appreciation for them, these social aspects also bring added value for those participants who are motivated primarily by growing vegetables. In chapter 7 we present a garden that exemplifies that gardens may encompass not only one, but indeed several communities, and that rapprochement and separation take place simultaneously. While this garden is an important meeting place, thereby contributing to social cohesion, it harbours two distinct communities. These communities assign others to categories (‘us’ and ‘them’) on the basis of place of residence, thereby strengthening their own social identities. Ownership over the garden is both an outcome and a tool in that struggle. We define the relationship between these two communities as instrumental-rational – referring to roles rather than individuals - which explains why they do not form a larger unity. Nevertheless, the two communities show the potential to develop into a larger imagined garden-community. Conclusions This thesis shows that the different organisational set-ups of community gardens reflect gardeners’ different motivations for being involved in these gardens. The gardens studied in this thesis can be defined as either place-based or interest-based; gardens in the first category are focused on the social benefits of gardening, whereas gardens in the second category are focused on gardening and vegetables. Nevertheless, social effects occur in both types of gardens; in all of the gardens studied, participants meet and get to know others and value these contacts. Based on this finding, I conclude that community gardens do indeed enhance social cohesion. Place-based community gardens specifically have the potential to become important meeting places; they offer the opportunity to work communally towards a common goal, and once established, can develop into neighbourhood spaces to be used for various other shared activities. Most interest-based gardens lack opportunities to develop the social contacts that originated at the garden beyond the borders of the garden. These gardens are often maintained by people who do not live close to the garden or to each other, and those who garden are generally less motivated by social motivations per se. Important to note is that community gardens do not necessarily foster a more inclusive society; they often attract people with relatively similar socio-economic backgrounds and may support not one, but several communities. Most participants from place-based gardens eat from their gardens only occasionally; others never do so. This type of community garden can therefore hardly be seen as a reaction to the industrialised food system, let alone an attempt to create an alternative food system. Nevertheless, certain aspects of these gardens are in line with the alternative rhetoric. By contrast, most gardeners at interest-based gardens eat a substantial amount of food from their gardens, and to some of them the choice to consume this locally-grown food relates to a lifestyle in which environmental considerations play a role. However, this reflexivity is not expressed in political terms and participants do not see themselves as part of a food movement. Participants who buy rather than grow produce showed the greatest tendency to explain their involvement in political terms, but many of them have difficulty including the produce in their diets on a regular basis. I therefore conclude that community gardens cannot be seen as conscious, ‘alternative’ alternatives to the industrial food system. Nonetheless, the role of food in these gardens is essential, as it is what brings participants together – either because they enjoy gardening or because the activities which are organised there centre around food. Theoretical contributions In this thesis I used and aimed to contribute to the theory of practice. Using participant observations to study what people do in reality was particularly useful. It turned research into an embodied activity, enabling me to truly ‘live the practice’, and therefore to understand it from the inside. Deconstructing the practice of food provisioning into activities such as buying, growing and cooking was helpful in gaining an understanding of how people manage everyday life, and how food acquisitioning fits into their everyday rhythms. It sheds light on how and to what extent people experience the practice of community gardening as a food acquisitioning practice, and to what degree they relate it to other elements of food provisioning such as cooking and eating. The focus on the separate elements of food provisioning practices helped me realise that acquiring food from community gardens represents a different practice to different people; some are engaged in the practice of growing food, others in the practice of shopping for food. This thesis showed that motivations delineate how the practice ‘works out in practice’; the way in which a practice such as community gardening is given shape attracts people with certain motivations, who, by reproducing that practice, increase the attractiveness of the practice for others with similar motivations. This implies that while community gardening appears to be one practice, it should in fact be interpreted as several distinct practices, such as the practice of food growing or the practice of social gathering. Motivations therefore influence a garden’s benefits and outcomes. This thesis thus highlights that motivations should not be overlooked when studying practices. Apprehending the motivations of community gardeners is also an important contribution to the literature around AFNs, since it helps us to understand the extent to which urban food production is truly alternative. By studying motivations, this thesis reveals that AFNs do not necessarily represent a deeper morality, or that not all food growing initiatives in the city can be defined as alternative. However, participants of community gardens are often both producers and consumers (there is a ‘sliding scale of producership’); the gardens are thus largely independent from the conventional food system. Moreover, for participants who buy produce, the meaning of the gardens often goes beyond an economic logic (there is a ‘sliding scale of marketness’). Hence, while the gardens studied in this thesis are no alternative alternatives, most of them can be qualified as ‘actually existing alternatives’ (after Jehlicka and Smith 2011). This thesis showed that even those gardens in which the commodification of food is being challenged do not necessarily represent a deeper morality, which is contrary to what is argued by Watts et al. (2005). This implies that understanding whether or not initiatives resist incorporation into the food system is insufficient to be able to determine whether or not they can be defined as alternative food networks. However, determining whether or not deeper moral reflection is present is not a satisfactory way of defining food networks as alternative either, as this neglects the fact that motivations do not always overlap with practical reality. This suggests that establishing whether a food network can be regarded as alternative requires studying both motivations and practical reality. The thesis also raises the question to what extent the label AFN is still useful. Since it is unclear what ‘alternative’ means exactly, it is also unclear whether a given initiative can be considered alternative. Moreover, the world of food seems too complex to be represented by a dichotomy between alternative and conventional food systems; the gardens presented in this thesis are diverse and carry characteristics of both systems. I therefore suggest considering replacing the term AFN with that of civic food networks, as Renting et al. (2012) advocate.
- Published
- 2015
13. Community gardens in urban areas: a critical reflection on the extent to which they strenghten social cohesion and provide alternative food
- Subjects
community action ,bewonersparticipatie ,OT Team Agriculture & Society ,alternatieve landbouw ,urban areas ,WASS ,tuinieren ,urban agriculture ,organic foods ,foods ,volkstuinen ,gardening ,publieke tuinen ,allotment gardens ,sociology ,public gardens ,sociologie ,voedingsmiddelen ,Rural Sociology ,stadslandbouw ,biologische voedingsmiddelen ,stedelijke gebieden ,buurtactie ,community participation ,Rurale Sociologie ,OT Team Landbouw & Samenleving ,alternative farming - Abstract
Summary Introduction The aims of this thesis are twofold; firstly, it aims to increase the understanding of the extent to which community gardens enhance social cohesion for those involved; secondly, it aims to gain insight into the importance community gardeners attach to food growing per se, and the extent to which participants perceive community gardens as an alternative to the industrial food system. I define community gardens as a plot of land in an urban area, cultivated either communally or individually by people from the direct neighbourhood or the wider city, or in which urbanites are involved in other ways than gardening, and to which there is a collective element. Over the last years, community gardens have sprung up in several Dutch cities. Although there are various reasons for an increasing interest in community gardens, there are two that I focus on in this thesis in particular. The first is the assumption made that community gardens stimulate social cohesion in inner-city neighbourhoods, to be seen in the light of the ‘participatory society’. The second is community gardens’ contribution to the availability of locally produced food, in the context of an increased interest in Alternative Food Networks (AFNs). The Dutch government aims to transform the Dutch welfare state into a participatory society in which citizens take more responsibility for their social and physical environment. This way the government not only hopes to limit public spending, but also wishes to increase social bonding and the self-organisational capacity of society. Community gardens fit the rhetoric around the participatory society, as they are examples of organised residents taking responsibility for their living environment. Moreover, the literature suggests that gardens are physical interventions that may decrease isolation by acting as meeting places. However, both the extent to which community gardens enhance social cohesion and under what conditions they may do so are unclear, especially as gardens come in various designs, shapes and sizes. The popularity of community gardens also seems to be related to an overall increasing societal interest in food, and can be discussed in relation to Alternative Food Networks. AFNs are food systems that are different in some way from the mainstream, and are seen as a reaction to consumer concerns about the conventional food system. They are often considered to be dictated by political motivations and injected with a ‘deeper morality’. The category ‘AFN’ is however a heterogeneous category, as is the conventional food system; neither can be easily defined. The degree to which community gardens can be seen as AFNs is therefore unclear. While they do improve the availability of local food and operate outside of the market economy, we do not know how much and how often people eat from their gardens, nor do we know to what extent they are involved in the gardens in order to provide an alternative to the industrial food system. Hence, there is a lack of knowledge about the sense in which community gardens are alternative alternatives. Research questions The overall research question of this thesis is: What is the significance of community gardening in terms of its intention to promote social cohesion as well as its representation as an alternative food system? This broad question is instructed by the following sub-questions: Why do people get involved in community gardens? What are their motivations?How, to what extent, and under which conditions does community gardening promote the development of social relations between participants? How do participants value these social effects? To what extent do the diets of community garden participants originate from the gardens in which they are involved? What is the importance of food in community gardens?What is the importance of growing or getting access to alternative food for participants of community gardens? Methodology An important theoretical lens in this research is the theory of practice. Practices are defined as concrete human activity and include things, bodily doings and sayings. By performing practices people not only draw upon but also feed into structure. Routinisation – of practices, but also of daily life – therefore plays a central role in practice theory. Practice theory allows for an emphasis on practical reality as well as a study of motivations. This focus on how people manage everyday life, and how gardening fits within that, makes it particularly useful for this thesis. I define social cohesion as the way in which people in a society feel and are connected to each other (De Kam and Needham 2003) and operationalised it by focusing on ‘social contacts, social networks, and social capital’, one of the elements into which social cohesion is often broken up. This element was operationalised as 1) contacts (the width of social cohesion) and 2) mutual help (the depth of social cohesion). This research has a case study design; I studied four Dutch community gardens over a two-year period of time, and later supplemented these with an additional three cases. As practices consist of both doings and sayings, analysis must be concerned with both practical activity and its representation. I used participant observations to study practical activities, and interviews, questionnaires and document study to examine the representation of these activities. Findings Chapters 3 to 7 form the main part of this thesis. They are papers/book chapters that have been submitted to or are published by scientific journals or books. All of them are based on the field work. In chapter 3 we compare two of the case studies and determine to what extent they can be seen as ‘alternative’. We argue that although reflexive motivations are present, most participants are unwilling to frame their involvement as political, and mundane motivations play an important role in people’s involvement as well. By using the concept of ‘food provisioning practices’ we show that participants of community gardens are often required to be actively involved in the production of their food. This means that participants are both producers and consumers: the gardens show a ‘sliding scale of producership’. This chapter also shows that political statements are not a perfect predictor of actual involvement in community gardening. This finding was one of the main reasons for starting to use the theory of practice, which is the main topic of the next chapter. In chapter 4 we compare one of my case studies with an urban food growing initiative in New York City. By comparing the internal dynamics of these two cases and their relations with other social practices, we investigate whether different urban food growing initiatives can be seen as variations of one single practice. We also study the question of whether the practice can be seen as emerging. In particular, we take the elements of meaning, competences and material (Shove et al. 2012) into account. We found both similarities and differences between the two cases, with the main difference relating to the meanings practitioners attach to the practice. We conclude, therefore, that it is not fully convincing to see these cases as examples of the same social practice. We also argue that urban food growing may be considered an emerging practice, because it combines various practices, both new and established, under one single heading. In chapter 5 we use the theory of practice to explore how urban food growing is interwoven with everyday life. We compare four community gardens - two allotments and two cases which we define as AFNs. We found that participants of the allotments are involved in the practice of gardening, while members of the AFNs are involved in the practice of shopping. The gardening practice requires structural engagement, turning it into a routine. The produce is a result of that routine and is easily integrated into daily meals. As AFNs are associated with the practice of shopping, they remain in competition with more convenient food acquisition venues. Eating from these gardens is therefore less easily integrated in daily life; every visit to the garden requires a conscious decision. Hence, whether members are primarily involved in shopping or in growing has an impact on the degree to which they eat urban-grown food. This shows that motivations are embedded in the context and routine of everyday life, and ‘only go so far’. Chapter 6 concerns the organisational differences between the seven case studies in this thesis and the extent to which these influence the enhancement of social cohesion. We study people’s motivations for being involved in the gardens and compare these with the three main organisational differences. This comparison reveals that the gardens can be divided into place-based and interest-based gardens. Place-based gardens are those in which people participate for social reasons – aiming to create social bonds in the neighbourhood. Interest-based gardens are those in which people participate because they enjoy growing vegetables. Nevertheless, all of these gardens contribute to the development of social cohesion. Moreover, while participants who are motivated by the social aspects of gardening show a higher level of appreciation for them, these social aspects also bring added value for those participants who are motivated primarily by growing vegetables. In chapter 7 we present a garden that exemplifies that gardens may encompass not only one, but indeed several communities, and that rapprochement and separation take place simultaneously. While this garden is an important meeting place, thereby contributing to social cohesion, it harbours two distinct communities. These communities assign others to categories (‘us’ and ‘them’) on the basis of place of residence, thereby strengthening their own social identities. Ownership over the garden is both an outcome and a tool in that struggle. We define the relationship between these two communities as instrumental-rational – referring to roles rather than individuals - which explains why they do not form a larger unity. Nevertheless, the two communities show the potential to develop into a larger imagined garden-community. Conclusions This thesis shows that the different organisational set-ups of community gardens reflect gardeners’ different motivations for being involved in these gardens. The gardens studied in this thesis can be defined as either place-based or interest-based; gardens in the first category are focused on the social benefits of gardening, whereas gardens in the second category are focused on gardening and vegetables. Nevertheless, social effects occur in both types of gardens; in all of the gardens studied, participants meet and get to know others and value these contacts. Based on this finding, I conclude that community gardens do indeed enhance social cohesion. Place-based community gardens specifically have the potential to become important meeting places; they offer the opportunity to work communally towards a common goal, and once established, can develop into neighbourhood spaces to be used for various other shared activities. Most interest-based gardens lack opportunities to develop the social contacts that originated at the garden beyond the borders of the garden. These gardens are often maintained by people who do not live close to the garden or to each other, and those who garden are generally less motivated by social motivations per se. Important to note is that community gardens do not necessarily foster a more inclusive society; they often attract people with relatively similar socio-economic backgrounds and may support not one, but several communities. Most participants from place-based gardens eat from their gardens only occasionally; others never do so. This type of community garden can therefore hardly be seen as a reaction to the industrialised food system, let alone an attempt to create an alternative food system. Nevertheless, certain aspects of these gardens are in line with the alternative rhetoric. By contrast, most gardeners at interest-based gardens eat a substantial amount of food from their gardens, and to some of them the choice to consume this locally-grown food relates to a lifestyle in which environmental considerations play a role. However, this reflexivity is not expressed in political terms and participants do not see themselves as part of a food movement. Participants who buy rather than grow produce showed the greatest tendency to explain their involvement in political terms, but many of them have difficulty including the produce in their diets on a regular basis. I therefore conclude that community gardens cannot be seen as conscious, ‘alternative’ alternatives to the industrial food system. Nonetheless, the role of food in these gardens is essential, as it is what brings participants together – either because they enjoy gardening or because the activities which are organised there centre around food. Theoretical contributions In this thesis I used and aimed to contribute to the theory of practice. Using participant observations to study what people do in reality was particularly useful. It turned research into an embodied activity, enabling me to truly ‘live the practice’, and therefore to understand it from the inside. Deconstructing the practice of food provisioning into activities such as buying, growing and cooking was helpful in gaining an understanding of how people manage everyday life, and how food acquisitioning fits into their everyday rhythms. It sheds light on how and to what extent people experience the practice of community gardening as a food acquisitioning practice, and to what degree they relate it to other elements of food provisioning such as cooking and eating. The focus on the separate elements of food provisioning practices helped me realise that acquiring food from community gardens represents a different practice to different people; some are engaged in the practice of growing food, others in the practice of shopping for food. This thesis showed that motivations delineate how the practice ‘works out in practice’; the way in which a practice such as community gardening is given shape attracts people with certain motivations, who, by reproducing that practice, increase the attractiveness of the practice for others with similar motivations. This implies that while community gardening appears to be one practice, it should in fact be interpreted as several distinct practices, such as the practice of food growing or the practice of social gathering. Motivations therefore influence a garden’s benefits and outcomes. This thesis thus highlights that motivations should not be overlooked when studying practices. Apprehending the motivations of community gardeners is also an important contribution to the literature around AFNs, since it helps us to understand the extent to which urban food production is truly alternative. By studying motivations, this thesis reveals that AFNs do not necessarily represent a deeper morality, or that not all food growing initiatives in the city can be defined as alternative. However, participants of community gardens are often both producers and consumers (there is a ‘sliding scale of producership’); the gardens are thus largely independent from the conventional food system. Moreover, for participants who buy produce, the meaning of the gardens often goes beyond an economic logic (there is a ‘sliding scale of marketness’). Hence, while the gardens studied in this thesis are no alternative alternatives, most of them can be qualified as ‘actually existing alternatives’ (after Jehlicka and Smith 2011). This thesis showed that even those gardens in which the commodification of food is being challenged do not necessarily represent a deeper morality, which is contrary to what is argued by Watts et al. (2005). This implies that understanding whether or not initiatives resist incorporation into the food system is insufficient to be able to determine whether or not they can be defined as alternative food networks. However, determining whether or not deeper moral reflection is present is not a satisfactory way of defining food networks as alternative either, as this neglects the fact that motivations do not always overlap with practical reality. This suggests that establishing whether a food network can be regarded as alternative requires studying both motivations and practical reality. The thesis also raises the question to what extent the label AFN is still useful. Since it is unclear what ‘alternative’ means exactly, it is also unclear whether a given initiative can be considered alternative. Moreover, the world of food seems too complex to be represented by a dichotomy between alternative and conventional food systems; the gardens presented in this thesis are diverse and carry characteristics of both systems. I therefore suggest considering replacing the term AFN with that of civic food networks, as Renting et al. (2012) advocate.
- Published
- 2015
14. Waardering voor ruigte Floriade 2002
- Subjects
tentoonstellingen ,public gardens ,cultural exhibitions ,wilderness ,overblijvende planten ,biodiversiteit ,diversiteit ,openbare parken ,Floriade ,forbs ,diversity ,plant communities ,natuurbeleving ,wildernis ,exhibitions ,ruigtekruiden ,publieke tuinen ,Wageningen Environmental Research ,openbaar groen ,ruigte ,perennials ,culturele uitingen ,public parks ,plantengemeenschappen - Abstract
Stedelijke ruigte heeft weinig te maken met ecologisch groenbeheer, betoogt Arie Koster. Aan veel ruigten liggen bezuinigingen, onvermogen of een gebrekkig vakmanschap ten grondslag. De vaste planten op de floriade 2002, waaronder ruigtekruidenvegetaties, werden hoog gewaardeerd
- Published
- 2002
15. Groenbeheer in de 20e eeuw: bijen in en om het openbaar groen
- Subjects
public gardens ,urban areas ,public green areas ,netherlands ,inventarisaties ,apidae ,nederland ,stedelijke gebieden ,inventories ,ecologie ,publieke tuinen ,Wageningen Environmental Research ,openbaar groen ,ecology ,bedrijfsvoering ,management - Abstract
Resultaat van een onderzoek naar de aanwezigheid van wilde bijen in openbaar groen en de relatie met ecologisch groenbeheer
- Published
- 2000
16. Ecologische kwaliteit ook door bijen bepaald; bijen in het openbaar groen (2)
- Subjects
green belts ,honey bees ,public gardens ,animal behaviour ,public green areas ,honingbijen ,Apidae ,openbare parken ,gewoonten ,groene zones ,Apis ,milieubeleid ,environmental policy ,diergedrag ,recreatiegebieden ,ecologie ,publieke tuinen ,amenity and recreation areas ,Wageningen Environmental Research ,openbaar groen ,ecology ,habits ,public parks - Abstract
De auteur stelde een richtlijn op om de ecologische kwaliteit van het groen te waarderen. Bijen zeggen veel over beheer en milieu
- Published
- 2000
17. Community gardens in urban areas: a critical reflection on the extent to which they strenghten social cohesion and provide alternative food
- Author
-
Wiskerke, Han, Visser, Andries, Bock, Bettina, Veen, E.J., Wiskerke, Han, Visser, Andries, Bock, Bettina, and Veen, E.J.
- Abstract
Summary Introduction The aims of this thesis are twofold; firstly, it aims to increase the understanding of the extent to which community gardens enhance social cohesion for those involved; secondly, it aims to gain insight into the importance community gardeners attach to food growing per se, and the extent to which participants perceive community gardens as an alternative to the industrial food system. I define community gardens as a plot of land in an urban area, cultivated either communally or individually by people from the direct neighbourhood or the wider city, or in which urbanites are involved in other ways than gardening, and to which there is a collective element. Over the last years, community gardens have sprung up in several Dutch cities. Although there are various reasons for an increasing interest in community gardens, there are two that I focus on in this thesis in particular. The first is the assumption made that community gardens stimulate social cohesion in inner-city neighbourhoods, to be seen in the light of the ‘participatory society’. The second is community gardens’ contribution to the availability of locally produced food, in the context of an increased interest in Alternative Food Networks (AFNs). The Dutch government aims to transform the Dutch welfare state into a participatory society in which citizens take more responsibility for their social and physical environment. This way the government not only hopes to limit public spending, but also wishes to increase social bonding and the self-organisational capacity of society. Community gardens fit the rhetoric around the participatory society, as they are examples of organised residents taking responsibility for their living environment. Moreover, the literature suggests that gardens are physical interventions that may decrease isolation by acting as meeting places. However, both the extent to which community gardens enhance social cohesion and under what conditions they may do so are uncl
- Published
- 2015
18. Gezocht: participatiekweker (m/v) : burgerparticipatie slaat gat in de markt; wie springt erin?
- Author
-
Voskuil, P. and Voskuil, P.
- Abstract
Op steeds meer plekken in het land schakelt de overheid burgers in bij het groenbeheer. Burgerparticipatie, heet dat dan. De redactie van dit blad verzon er een mooi woord bij: de participatiekweker. Een woord dat tot vóór dit artikel nog niet eens bestond. Het is namelijk tijd om te gaan participatiekweken, constateren een aantal deskundigen in dit artikel.
- Published
- 2015
19. Testimonial Erwin Stevens
- Abstract
In dit filmpje vertelt Erwin Stevens, een van de bewoners van Sint Martenshof over hoe hun gemeenschappelijke tuin in ontstaan. Hij heeft nog een goede tip voor opdrachtgevers van de Wetenschapswinkel: “Denk goed na over de vraag van je opdracht aan de Wetenschapswinkel.”
- Published
- 2015
20. Testimonial Bram ten Cate
- Abstract
Bram ten Cate coördineerde voor de wetenschapswinkel het Sint Martenshof-project, waarin bewoners samen met onderzoekers en studenten gezamenlijk een tuin ontwierpen. In dit filmpje vertelt hij hoe van wensen en randvoorwaarden (ecologie, water en bodem, inrichting van de tuin) te komen tot een
- Published
- 2015
21. meerwaarde van onderzoek naar groentoepassingen op het PCS : het standpunt van Marc Galle (voorzitter verbond van tuinaannemers) en Bruno Gobin (directeur PCS)
- Abstract
Het Proefcentrum voor Sierteelt (PCS) in België ondersteunt de professionele groenvoorzieners via verschillende demonstraties en studiedagen waarop theoretische concepten vertaald worden naar concrete toepassingen. Hierdoor kunnen groenvoorzieners snel de sterktes en zwaktes beoordelen op het terrein en de kennis onmiddellijk toepassen op het eigen bedrijf.
- Published
- 2015
22. De ecologische hoogstructuur, stadsnatuur van allure
- Subjects
public gardens ,ecological engineering ,urban areas ,Instituut voor Bos- en Natuuronderzoek ,infrastructure ,openbare parken ,noord-holland ,stadsomgeving ,urban environment ,infrastructuur ,stedelijke gebieden ,water systems ,Institute for Forestry and Nature Research ,steden ,watersystemen ,recreatiegebieden ,ecologie ,publieke tuinen ,amenity and recreation areas ,ecology ,natuurtechniek ,towns ,public parks - Abstract
Onderzoek naar de vraag hoe duurzaamheid op het gebied van stadsnatuur en water kan worden gekoppeld aan de beoogde internationale allure van de stad Amsterdam. Een ontwerp voor een EHS voor de kantoorstad Masterplan zuidas
- Published
- 1999
23. Ooghoogte 1 meter: wat vinden kinderen van de eigen woonomgeving?
- Subjects
huizen ,perceptie ,sociale ecologie ,buurten ,speelterreinen ,Instituut voor Bos- en Natuuronderzoek ,infrastructure ,perception ,openbare parken ,living conditions ,homes ,kinderen ,children ,Institute for Forestry and Nature Research ,human ecology ,publieke tuinen ,levensomstandigheden ,districts ,housing ,desires ,public gardens ,neighbourhoods ,landschap ,landscape ,wensen ,infrastructuur ,playgrounds ,districten ,huisvesting ,public parks - Abstract
Onderzoek naar woonmilieu's met groene kwaliteiten. Het doel, de methode en onderzoeksresultaten zijn vermeld
- Published
- 1999
24. Beelden en begrippen voor bosplantsoen en landschappelijke beplantingen (1)
- Subjects
green belts ,planting stock ,public gardens ,bosbomen ,forestry ,Instituut voor Bos- en Natuuronderzoek ,openbare parken ,bosbouw ,groene zones ,Institute for Forestry and Nature Research ,recreatiegebieden ,publieke tuinen ,amenity and recreation areas ,plantmateriaal ,forest trees ,public parks - Published
- 1998
25. 250 jaar Copijn in het groen : tentoonstelling 4 april 2014 t/m 1 augustus 2014
- Author
-
Dijkstra, A.G. and Karssen-Schüürmann, J.
- Subjects
landschapsarchitectuur ,tentoonstellingen ,public gardens ,bibliotheken ,geschiedenis ,scientific libraries ,wetenschappelijke bibliotheken ,exhibitions ,tuinen ,libraries ,tuinen bij het huis ,publieke tuinen ,landscape architecture ,gardens ,history ,Library Research and Education Support, Frontoffice ,domestic gardens - Abstract
Twee en een halve eeuw al zijn de leden van de familie Copijn werkzaam in het groen. Een onafgebroken traditie die begon toen Hendrik Copijn zich in 1763 in Groenekan vestigde. Nog steeds is hier Copijn Groenekan boomkwekerij en tuinarchitectuur gevestigd, alsmede ontwerp- en adviesbureau Copijn Bruine Beuk en een paar kilometer ten zuidwesten van Groenekan aan de Gageldijk bevindt zich het bedrijf Copijn Tuin- en Landschapsarchitecten / Boomspecialisten / Groenaanleg en beheer. Deze tentoonstelling is gebaseerd op het boek ‘Met levend materiaal’ : Copijn 1763-2013 tweehonderdvijftig jaar tuinlieden, boomkwekers, boomverzorgers en tuin- en landschapsarchitecten
- Published
- 2014
26. Het beheer van park- en stadsbossen
- Subjects
forest pathology ,green belts ,public gardens ,forest pests ,forestry ,utrecht ,Instituut voor Bos- en Natuuronderzoek ,achteruitgang ,bospathologie ,protection of forests ,afsterving ,bosbouw ,forest damage ,groene zones ,bosschade ,bosbescherming ,Institute for Forestry and Nature Research ,dieback ,forest decline ,publieke tuinen ,bossen ,bosplagen ,bedrijfsvoering ,management - Published
- 1997
27. Recreatieve groenstructuur in en bij de stad; geen groennormen zonder groenstructuur
- Subjects
green belts ,public gardens ,bosbouw in steden ,Soil and Water Research ,forestry ,Instituut voor Bos- en Natuuronderzoek ,recreation ,openbare parken ,recreatiebeleid ,bosbouw ,groene zones ,Institute for Forestry and Nature Research ,Staring Centrum ,beleid ,leisure policy ,transport ,recreatiegebieden ,Winand Staring Centre for Integrated Land ,publieke tuinen ,amenity and recreation areas ,recreatie ,urban forestry ,policy ,public parks - Published
- 1996
28. Natuur in de stad, brug naar het platteland
- Subjects
green belts ,public gardens ,natuur ,bosbouw in steden ,herstel ,ecological engineering ,forestry ,Instituut voor Bos- en Natuuronderzoek ,nature ,netherlands ,openbare parken ,bosbouw ,rehabilitation ,nederland ,groene zones ,Institute for Forestry and Nature Research ,recreatiegebieden ,publieke tuinen ,amenity and recreation areas ,natuurtechniek ,urban forestry ,public parks - Published
- 1996
29. Winterbeelden in het openbaar groen
- Subjects
green belts ,public gardens ,perceptie ,milieu ,public green areas ,Instituut voor Bos- en Natuuronderzoek ,netherlands ,landschap ,landscape ,perception ,openbare parken ,winter ,nederland ,groene zones ,agricultural land ,Institute for Forestry and Nature Research ,recreatiegebieden ,publieke tuinen ,amenity and recreation areas ,openbaar groen ,environment ,landbouwgrond ,public parks - Published
- 1996
30. Welkom op Tuinenpark De Koekelt : de kracht van tuinenparken voor de wijk
- Author
-
Alix, L. and Eppink, H.J.
- Subjects
bewonersparticipatie ,public gardens ,recreation ,human population ,urban agriculture ,stadsomgeving ,urban environment ,culturele interactie ,stadslandbouw ,nationaliteiten ,tuinen ,bevolking ,Onderwijs- en leerwetenschappen ,publieke tuinen ,Education and Learning Sciences ,gardens ,community participation ,recreatie ,cultural interaction ,nationalities - Abstract
120 tuinders van 14 verschillende nationaliteiten en een variatie van nutstuinen tot wilde bloementuinen. Dat is tuinenpark De Koekelt. Een volkstuincomplex in Ede dat sinds de winter van 2011-2012 is opengesteld naar de wijk. Buurtbewoners hebben nu vrij toegang tot het tuinenpark en kunnen wandelen over de paden in het park, die aansluiten op de wandelpaden in het aangrenzende Veldhuizerbos. Het toekomstige verenigingsgebouw wordt een ontmoetingsplaats voor tuinders en buurtbewoners. In deze brochure staat uitgelegd hoe tuinenparken de openstelling naar de wijk het beste kunnen aanpakken. De brochure komt voort uit een onderzoek dat de Wetenschapswinkel,Wageningen UR (University & Research centre) voor Tuinenpark De Koekelt heeft uitgevoerd. Dit onderzoek geeft aan op welke manier bewoners en organisaties uit de buurt het beste bij het tuinenpark betrokken kunnen worden. En hoe de saamhorigheid onder tuinders versterkt kan worden.
- Published
- 2012
31. Groen van toen: van buitenplaats tot schooltuin
- Subjects
Library ,tentoonstellingen ,public gardens ,verzamelingen ,geschiedenis ,garden architecture ,openbare parken ,tuinarchitectuur ,exhibitions ,tuinen ,tuinen bij het huis ,publieke tuinen ,collections ,gardens ,history ,domestic gardens ,public parks - Abstract
Grote technische ontwikkelingen en toenemende welvaart hebben in de loop der eeuwen de natuur dichter bij de mens gebracht. In deze tentoonstelling staat de gebruiker van het door de mens geschapen groen centraal. Rond drie thema’s: particulier groen, wandelen in openbaar groen en wonen in het groen, wordt de bezoeker meegenomen langs tuinen van adel en burgerij, door openbare parken, dierentuinen en schooltuinen en tenslotte door tuinsteden, villaparken en arbeiders-woonwijken. De tentoonstelling toont aan dat de Nederlandse tuin- en landschaps-architectuur altijd beïnvloed is geweest door ideeën uit Duitsland, Frankrijk en Engeland. Er worden boeken getoond van auteurs zoals Petrus Lauremberg (Horticultura, libris II, 1632), Anthoine Dezallier d'Argenville (La theorie et la pratique du jardinage, 1711) en William Robinson (The English flower garden, 1893). Hun invloed is terug te vinden in boeken, kaarten, foto’s en ontwerpen van o.a. Heinrich Witte (Tuinen, villa’s en buitenplaatsen, 1876-1878), Henri Hartogh Heys van Zouteveen (Boomen en heesters in parken en tuinen, 1908), Leonard Springer en vele anderen. De tentoongestelde documenten plaatsen de gebruikers van het groen in eigen tijd en omgeving.
- Published
- 2012
32. Groen van toen: van buitenplaats tot schooltuin
- Author
-
Oldenburger-Ebbers, C.S. and Karssen, J.
- Subjects
Library ,tentoonstellingen ,public gardens ,verzamelingen ,geschiedenis ,garden architecture ,openbare parken ,tuinarchitectuur ,exhibitions ,tuinen ,tuinen bij het huis ,publieke tuinen ,collections ,gardens ,history ,domestic gardens ,public parks - Abstract
Grote technische ontwikkelingen en toenemende welvaart hebben in de loop der eeuwen de natuur dichter bij de mens gebracht. In deze tentoonstelling staat de gebruiker van het door de mens geschapen groen centraal. Rond drie thema’s: particulier groen, wandelen in openbaar groen en wonen in het groen, wordt de bezoeker meegenomen langs tuinen van adel en burgerij, door openbare parken, dierentuinen en schooltuinen en tenslotte door tuinsteden, villaparken en arbeiders-woonwijken. De tentoonstelling toont aan dat de Nederlandse tuin- en landschaps-architectuur altijd beïnvloed is geweest door ideeën uit Duitsland, Frankrijk en Engeland. Er worden boeken getoond van auteurs zoals Petrus Lauremberg (Horticultura, libris II, 1632), Anthoine Dezallier d'Argenville (La theorie et la pratique du jardinage, 1711) en William Robinson (The English flower garden, 1893). Hun invloed is terug te vinden in boeken, kaarten, foto’s en ontwerpen van o.a. Heinrich Witte (Tuinen, villa’s en buitenplaatsen, 1876-1878), Henri Hartogh Heys van Zouteveen (Boomen en heesters in parken en tuinen, 1908), Leonard Springer en vele anderen. De tentoongestelde documenten plaatsen de gebruikers van het groen in eigen tijd en omgeving.
- Published
- 2012
33. Welkom op Tuinenpark De Koekelt : de kracht van tuinenparken voor de wijk
- Subjects
bewonersparticipatie ,public gardens ,recreation ,human population ,urban agriculture ,stadsomgeving ,urban environment ,culturele interactie ,stadslandbouw ,nationaliteiten ,tuinen ,bevolking ,Onderwijs- en leerwetenschappen ,publieke tuinen ,Education and Learning Sciences ,gardens ,community participation ,recreatie ,cultural interaction ,nationalities - Abstract
120 tuinders van 14 verschillende nationaliteiten en een variatie van nutstuinen tot wilde bloementuinen. Dat is tuinenpark De Koekelt. Een volkstuincomplex in Ede dat sinds de winter van 2011-2012 is opengesteld naar de wijk. Buurtbewoners hebben nu vrij toegang tot het tuinenpark en kunnen wandelen over de paden in het park, die aansluiten op de wandelpaden in het aangrenzende Veldhuizerbos. Het toekomstige verenigingsgebouw wordt een ontmoetingsplaats voor tuinders en buurtbewoners. In deze brochure staat uitgelegd hoe tuinenparken de openstelling naar de wijk het beste kunnen aanpakken. De brochure komt voort uit een onderzoek dat de Wetenschapswinkel,Wageningen UR (University & Research centre) voor Tuinenpark De Koekelt heeft uitgevoerd. Dit onderzoek geeft aan op welke manier bewoners en organisaties uit de buurt het beste bij het tuinenpark betrokken kunnen worden. En hoe de saamhorigheid onder tuinders versterkt kan worden.
- Published
- 2012
34. Landinrichtingsbeleid voortdurend in beweging
- Subjects
milieu ,land use planning ,land policy ,netherlands ,openbare parken ,landgebruik ,government policy ,grondbeleid ,nederland ,publieke tuinen ,overheidsbeleid ,bedrijfsvoering ,Spatial Analysis ,public gardens ,plattelandsontwikkeling ,land use ,landgebruiksplanning ,Ruimtelijke planvorming ,plattelandsplanning ,Planning and Design ,recreatiegebieden ,ruimtelijke ordening ,amenity and recreation areas ,physical planning ,environment ,rural planning ,management ,rural development ,public parks - Abstract
In dit artikel behandelt de auteur diverse zaken die betrekking hebben op het landinrichtingsbeleid. Vooral het Structuurschema Groene Ruimte is van invloed op de landinrichtingsplannen
- Published
- 1994
35. Op weg naar Park Essenburg : advies aan Bewonersgroep ProGroen Rotterdam
- Subjects
public gardens ,rotterdam ,urban parks ,public green areas ,CL - Urban and Regional Development ,stadsparken ,urban development ,urban ecology ,spoorwegen ,stadsontwikkeling ,railways ,publieke tuinen ,Wageningen Environmental Research ,openbaar groen ,stedelijke ecologie ,CL - Stadsregionale Ontwikkeling - Abstract
Bewonersgroep ProGroen in Rotterdam is voor het behoud van een miskende groenstrook van circa twaalf hectare tussen de spoordijk en Essenburgsingel. Ze wil dat het gebied in de deelgemeente Delfshaven het groene en duurzame karakter behoudt en dat het in de toekomst goed bruikbaar is en blijft voor alle mensen uit de buurt en de stad. De Wetenschapswinkel ziet voor ProGroen de opgave weggelegd om aan te tonen dat de strook een waardevol groenelement is in de stad. Het park draagt bij aan de sociale cohesie: het vergroot het aantal ontmoetingsplekken in de wijk, biedt laagdrempelige aanleidingen om contact te leggen en motiveert bewoners te investeren in relaties in de buurt. Daarnaast biedt het park de wijkbewoners nieuwe mogelijkheden om in contact te komen met groen, met natuur. De eerste concrete invulling van het park is PlukTuin Essenburg RFC. Deze PlukTuin, een buurttuin, wordt aangelegd op een voormalige parkeerplaats. Opzet is dat bewoners de PlukTuin zelf aanleggen en onderhouden
- Published
- 2011
36. Op weg naar Park Essenburg : advies aan Bewonersgroep ProGroen Rotterdam
- Author
-
Veer, P.M., Kersten, I., Noorthuizen, J., Bouman, V., van Huit, J., Bergstra, E., Egging, M., and Quaedvlieg, E.
- Subjects
public gardens ,rotterdam ,urban parks ,public green areas ,CL - Urban and Regional Development ,stadsparken ,urban development ,urban ecology ,spoorwegen ,stadsontwikkeling ,railways ,publieke tuinen ,Wageningen Environmental Research ,openbaar groen ,stedelijke ecologie ,CL - Stadsregionale Ontwikkeling - Abstract
Bewonersgroep ProGroen in Rotterdam is voor het behoud van een miskende groenstrook van circa twaalf hectare tussen de spoordijk en Essenburgsingel. Ze wil dat het gebied in de deelgemeente Delfshaven het groene en duurzame karakter behoudt en dat het in de toekomst goed bruikbaar is en blijft voor alle mensen uit de buurt en de stad. De Wetenschapswinkel ziet voor ProGroen de opgave weggelegd om aan te tonen dat de strook een waardevol groenelement is in de stad. Het park draagt bij aan de sociale cohesie: het vergroot het aantal ontmoetingsplekken in de wijk, biedt laagdrempelige aanleidingen om contact te leggen en motiveert bewoners te investeren in relaties in de buurt. Daarnaast biedt het park de wijkbewoners nieuwe mogelijkheden om in contact te komen met groen, met natuur. De eerste concrete invulling van het park is PlukTuin Essenburg RFC. Deze PlukTuin, een buurttuin, wordt aangelegd op een voormalige parkeerplaats. Opzet is dat bewoners de PlukTuin zelf aanleggen en onderhouden
- Published
- 2011
37. oogst aan inspirerende groenprojecten
- Abstract
Presentatie van een aantal projecten: de aanleg van een park rond landhuizen, de uitbreiding van een begraafplaats, een educatief parkje, de herinrichting van een plein en een park, een binnentuin, het herstel van een beeksysteem en de realisatie van een groendak.
- Published
- 2014
38. succesverhaal uit de praktijk : stadstuin Emma's Hof
- Author
-
Schuwer, T. and Schuwer, T.
- Abstract
Stel je voor: je wilt als burger meer sociale betrokkenheid tussen de mensen in je woonwijk. Dan kun je natuurlijk ellenlange klaagbrieven schrijven aan de gemeente voor meer openbare ruimte in de wijk. Maar je kunt natuurlijk ook zelf het heft in handen nemen en dát is precies wat er is gebeurd in het Haagse Regentessekwartier. Enkele buurtbewoners richten hier de stiching Emma’s Hof op. Helemaal in de geest van de huidige regering ‘partcipeerden ze er lustig op los’, met als eindresultaat stadstuin Emma’s Hof.
- Published
- 2014
39. Bekoorlijke Britse tuinen
- Author
-
Vandromme, D. and Vandromme, D.
- Abstract
Naar aanleiding van het lustrum van 125 jaar K.H. Sint-Fiacre organiseerde deze West-Vlaamse beroepsvereniging voor sierteelt en tuinaanleg tussen 19 en 21 juli een studiereis naar Groot-Brittannië. Daarbij werden een aantal iconen van de Britse tuin- en landschapsarchitectuur bezocht. In deze tweede bijdrage nemen we een kijkje in Hidcote Manor Garden en de universiteitstad Oxford.
- Published
- 2014
40. Een pleidooi voor 'conviviale vormgeving'
- Subjects
green belts ,landschapsarchitectuur ,Spatial Analysis ,planting stock ,public gardens ,landscaping ,design ,openbare parken ,ontwerp ,landschapsbouw ,Ruimtelijke planvorming ,groene zones ,tuinen ,Planning and Design ,recreatiegebieden ,publieke tuinen ,amenity and recreation areas ,landscape architecture ,gardens ,plantmateriaal ,public parks - Published
- 1993
41. Nieuwe mineermot op paardenkastanje; landelijke inventarisatie
- Subjects
urban areas ,netherlands ,openbare parken ,cameraria ,tortricidae ,nederland ,populatie-ecologie ,oogstschade ,crop damage ,publieke tuinen ,Wageningen Environmental Research ,diagnostische technieken ,insects ,green belts ,public gardens ,diagnostic techniques ,insect pests ,forestry ,aesculus hippocastanum ,insectenplagen ,bosbouw ,insecten ,groene zones ,stedelijke gebieden ,population ecology ,recreatiegebieden ,amenity and recreation areas ,public parks - Abstract
Inventarisatie van schadelijke insecten op bomen en struiken in het stedelijk gebied en het landschappelijk groen met afbeeldingen van schadebeelden en een overzicht van de insecten top tien 1999
- Published
- 2000
42. Gidssoorten geven ecologische kwaliteit van groen aan
- Subjects
wilde planten ,vegetation management ,milieu ,urban areas ,openbare parken ,stadsomgeving ,vegetatie ,indicator plants ,soil ,vegetation ,habitats ,ecologie ,indicatorplanten ,publieke tuinen ,Wageningen Environmental Research ,kwaliteit ,plant ecology ,urban forestry ,bedrijfsvoering ,vegetatiebeheer ,green belts ,public gardens ,bosbouw in steden ,wild plants ,urban environment ,groene zones ,bodem ,stedelijke gebieden ,quality ,plantenecologie ,ecology ,environment ,management ,public parks - Abstract
Wat is ecologische kwaliteit van stedelijk groen? Planten kunnen hier als indicatorsoorten dienen. Als voorbeeld in een schema de gidssoorten voor verschillende typen vegetaties afhankelijk van het (bodem)milieu, met daarbij de gewenste beheermaatregelen
- Published
- 2000
43. Vlinders als wegwijzers voor een natuurlijker openbaar groen
- Subjects
green belts ,groene zones ,public gardens ,Nature Conservation Department ,recreatiegebieden ,public green areas ,publieke tuinen ,amenity and recreation areas ,lepidoptera ,Afdeling Natuurbehoud en Natuurbeheer ,openbaar groen ,openbare parken ,public parks - Published
- 1991
44. Tulpenland opent inspiratietuinen
- Author
-
Ooms, M. and Ooms, M.
- Abstract
Tulpenland is zijn tweede seizoen ingegaan en het tulpenbeleefpark krijgt steevast positieve reacties van bezoekers. Dat is voor de initiatiefnemers van Fluwel geen reden om relaxt achterover te leunen. Op zoek naar een goede invulling voor een nog onontwikkeld deel van het park, kwamen zij uit bij inspiratietuinen. 'Zo willen we onze bezoekers inspireren om ook in hun eigen tuin met bloembollen aan de slag te gaan.'
- Published
- 2013
45. Groen krijgt prioriteit in Nieuwpoort
- Author
-
De Geest, W. and De Geest, W.
- Abstract
Op 27 september was de stad Nieuwpoort de locatie voor de internationale prijsuitreiking van de Europese wedstrijd Entente Florale. Tijdens een door de VVOG ingericht symposium werden de groenprojecten van de stad nader belicht. Het werd duidelijk dat de stad het laatste decennium jaren een visie heeft ontwikkeld over openbaar groen en deze ook geleidelijk aan realiseert.
- Published
- 2013
46. Ecologische tuin campus Wageningen UR
- Author
-
Spijker, J. and Spijker, J.
- Abstract
Ontstaansgeschiedenis natuurtuin, zijnde een ontwerp van Ger Londo rond de kantoortuin bij het nieuwe gebouw voor IBN, dat in 1998 gereed kwam.
- Published
- 2013
47. KIGO-projecten
- Abstract
Derdejaarsstudenten van Hogeschool Van Hall Larenstein werken mee aan projecten van het lectoraat Groene leefomgeving van steden. Onder deze projecten vallen zogenoemde KIGO-projecten, afkomstig van de Groene Kennis Coöperatie. KIGO staat voor Kennisverspreiding en Innovatie in het Groen onderwijs. Doel van deze projecten is om een brug te slaan tussen studenten, bestuurders en gebruikers van de (semi)-openbare ruimte. Studenten leren hoe ze in goede samenwerking met gebruikers en bestuurders een succesvolle buitenruimte kunnen creëren. Voor de richting management buitenruimte hebben tien studenten gewerkt aan een participatieproject voor het park Bato’s wijk in Oosterbeek.
- Published
- 2012
48. nieuwe denken volgens Dick Nieuwesteeg : de sortimentstuin Harry van de Laar in Boskoop krijgt een nieuwe opzet en invulling
- Author
-
Iersel, H. van and Iersel, H. van
- Abstract
De bekende sortimentstuin Harry van de Laar aan het Rijneveld in Boskoop was de laatste jaren wat in de vergetelheid geraakt. Gelukkig heeft nu een nieuw stichtingsbestuur onder voorzitterschap van Dick Nieuwesteeg weer leven in de brouwerij gebracht.
- Published
- 2012
49. Thema groene stad
- Abstract
Het thema van dit nummer is 'de Groene stad', waarin aandacht voor stadslandbouw, het investeren van groen in de stad ondanks de economische crises, de verkoop van streekproducten, de keuze om een stadstuin aan te leggen of een sportveld en het tijdelijk gebruik van braakliggend bouwterrein als buurttuin.
- Published
- 2012
50. eetbare stad: groen verbroedert : aanleg van een park met groenten en fruit rond gemeentehuis
- Author
-
Raats, S. and Raats, S.
- Abstract
De gemeente Berkelland heeft bij de aanleg van het nieuwe park in de achtertuin van haar gemeentehuis niet alleen flink samengewerkt met maatschappelijke instanties, een school en burgers. Maar ook gééft het de burger iets lekkers om te eten mee naar huis: iedereen mag namelijk in de groentetuin en van de fruit struiken en -bomen rond het gemeentehuis komen plukken. Het allerbeste voorbeeld van De eetbare stad. Iljitsj IJsebrands, de geestelijk vader van het project, vertelt over het ontwerp en de totstandkoming.
- Published
- 2012
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